The Care Span
THE CARE SPANFewer Hospitalizations Result When Primary Care Is Highly Integrated Into A Continuing Care Retirement Community
- Julie P.W. Bynum ( [email protected] ) is an associate professor of medicine and associate director of the Center for Health Policy Research at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Dartmouth Medical School, in Lebanon, New Hampshire.
- Alice Andrews is an instructor at the Dartmouth Institute.
- Sandra Sharp is a research associate at the Dartmouth Institute.
- Dennis McCullough is an associate professor of community and family medicine at Dartmouth Medical School.
- John E. Wennberg is the Peggy Y. Thompson Professor (chair) in the Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Dartmouth Medical School, and is the founder and director emeritus of the Dartmouth Institute.
Abstract
Meeting the medical and social needs of elderly people is likely to be costly, disruptive, and at odds with personal preferences if efforts to do so are not well coordinated. We compared two different models of primary care in four different continuing care retirement communities. In the first model, used in one community, the physicians and two part-time nurse practitioners delivered clinical care only at that site, covered all settings within it, and provided all after-hours coverage. In the second model, used in three communities, on-site primary care physician hours were limited; the same physicians also had independent practices outside the retirement community; and after-hours calls were covered by all members of the practices, including physicians who did not practice on site. We found that residents in the first model had two to three times fewer hospitalizations and emergency department visits. Only 5 percent of those who died did so in a hospital, compared to 15 percent at the other sites and 27 percent nationally. These findings provide insight into what is possible when medical care is highly integrated into a residential retirement setting.